"Your photos are a moving, artistic documentary of the
pain and beauty of transition – looking back without a reassuring window on
the future. You have singled out so effectively select portions of space,
object, and evoked experience."

"Your work is strong and personal and authentic."

"I love your photographs; they are somewhat sad, but they are
beautiful and somehow organic, both in the presence and in the dissolution of a
life lived. They especially resonate
with me as I have been taking photos of the disintegration of my family's farm
for some years. I would love to see more of your work."

"I was taken
by the beauty and power of the images."

"I stopped for quite
a long time to look at your work and was really struck by it, thinking about my past, memory, history, etc. I ended up having a
dream where several of your images figured in."

"Case evokes a whole world of 20th-century Proustian memory – those
photos, that suitcase, just are the unrecoverable time of parents and
grandparents. (It reminds me also of W.G. Sebald's writing, whose meditations
on memory, imagination, and re-collection might fit your work.) Pastorale gave me the immediate sense that I
wanted it on my wall: there are
centuries of experience slipped into that photo."

"Your pictures alone are stunning (right up my alley, as
I love light, forms, and color). Before I even read the statement, I definitely
could feel a sense of loss and memory in your photos. They're truly
fantastic. But coupled with the statement, I think your work is quite
amazing and tells a sad but inevitable story. I'm so glad you got to share it
for a brief moment."

"What you are producing is powerful, real, and immensely
beautiful."

"The photo of the piano – the way it is underexposed –
really caught my attention. The subtle tones encourage a closer look. The
piano is a symbol for so many things: childhood, joy of music and, for some,
escape. What I took from that single photograph is the sound of music, or lack thereof.
Your photograph
asks your viewer many questions."

"The images are simply beautiful and haunting and how
anyone cannot see that they are an affirmation of life is beyond me."

"Your 'banned' photo essay moved me very
much. I lost both my parents in recent years, and had to do a smaller-scale version of your
cleanout of their apartment. Your images evoked those feelings again: the memories inherent in commonplace objects, the empty spaces where life
was once lived."

"I'm so grateful to see your work and know there are
others who have been through similar weighty tasks and made something from it."

"The work is beautiful and is real life. It is
okay to feel, and it is okay for public places to express some
real emotion. In fact, it is about time."

"How sad to deprive coffee drinkers
the opportunity to engage with quality art about a subject that matters, art
that isn't the 'usual fluff,' art that is subtly saturated with the poignant
presence of loss."